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Social
Statements | Church in Society

The social teaching statement, "The Church
in Society: A Lutheran Perspective," was the first social
statement adopted at the second biennial Churchwide Assembly of the
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, August 28-September 4, 1991.
It was adopted by a more than two- thirds majority vote.
The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America is called
to be a part of the ecumenical church of Jesus Christ in the context
in which God has placed it -- a diverse, divided, and threatened
global society on a beautiful, fragile planet. In faithfulness
to its calling, this church is committed to defend human dignity, to
stand with poor and powerless people, to advocate justice, to work
for peace, and to care for the earth in the processes and structures
of contemporary society.
This statement, The Church in Society: A
Lutheran Perspective, sets forth affirmations and commitments
to guide this church's participation in society. It seeks to
be true to this church's mandate to confess and teach both law and
Gospel as the whole Word of the Triune God. This church
witnesses to the living God -- Father, Son, and Holy Spirit -- who
in love creates, judges, and preserves the world and redeems,
sanctifies, and brings it to fulfillment in God's reign.
I. Affirmations
A. The Gospel and the Church
The church, the baptized people of God, is created by the Holy
Spirit through the gospel to proclaim and to follow God's crucified
Messiah. As the gathering of children, youth, men, and women who
hear, believe, and receive the living Christ in Word and Sacrament,
the church witnesses in word and deed to Jesus as Lord and Savior.
The proclamation of the Gospel as the good news of
God's salvation given in the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus
distinguishes the church from all other communities. The gospel
liberates from sin, death, and evil and motivates the church to care
for the neighbor and the earth.
The witness of this church in society flows from its
identity as a community that lives from and for the gospel. Faith is
active in love; love calls for justice in the relationships and
structures of society. It is in grateful response to God's grace in
Jesus Christ that this church carries out its responsibility for the
well-being of society and the environment.
Word and Sacrament are the originating center for
this church's mission in the world through its baptized members,
congregations, synods, churchwide organization, social ministry
organizations, and educational institutions. Through preaching,
teaching, the sacraments, Scripture, and "mutual conversation
and consolation," [1]
the church is gathered and shaped by the Holy Spirit to be a serving
and liberating presence in the world. In praying for the peace of
the whole world and in interceding for those who suffer and for
those in authority, the church serves the world. The church gives
thanks to God for the blessings of creation and prays to be
empowered to do God's will in society.
B. The Church Universal
The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America is part of the
"one, holy, catholic, and apostolic" church. Its witness
in society is informed by the history and the various theological
traditions of the one church of Jesus Christ. The suffering and hope
of churches in Africa, Asia, Australia, Europe, and the Americas
strengthen its life and calling.
As a member of the worldwide Lutheran communion, the
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America is united with churches
around the globe in a common tradition and mission. This church
builds upon a legacy of more than three-hundred years of Lutheran
presence in the United States and the Caribbean and affirms its
cultural, racial, and ethnic diversity as vital to its identity.
C. The Church 'In' But Not 'From'
the World
Through faith in the gospel the church already takes part in the
reign of God announced by and embodied in Jesus. Yet, it still
awaits the resurrection of the dead and the fulfillment of the whole
creation in God's promised future. In this time of "now .. not
yet," the church lives in two ages--the present age and the age
to come. The church is 'in' the world but not 'from' the world.
The gospel does not take the church out of the world
but instead calls it to affirm and to enter more deeply into the
world. Although in bondage to sin and death, the world is God's good
creation, where, because of love, God in Jesus Christ became flesh.
The church and the world have a common destiny in the reign of God.
The church acts for the sake of the world in hope and prayer:
"Your kingdom come, your will be done on earth as in
heaven."
The gospel does not allow the church to accommodate
to the ways of the world. The presence and promise of God's reign
makes the church restless and discontented with the world's
brokenness and violence. Acting for the sake of God's world requires
resisting and struggling against the evils of the world.
The church is "a new creation ... from
God" (2Cor 5:17-18), but it is still part of a fallen humanity,
sharing fully the brokenness of the world. It is a community of
saints, a people righteous before God on account of Jesus'
self-giving love, and at the same time a community of sinners.
Repentance, forgiveness, and renewal characterize the church that
lives under the cross with the hope of the coming in fullness of
God's reign.
D. The Church's
Responsibility in Society
In witnessing to Jesus Christ, the church announces that the God
who justifies expects all people to do justice. God's good and just
demands address people in the obligations of their relationships and
the challenges of the world. Through the divine activity of the law,
God preserves creation, orders society, and promotes justice in a
broken world.
God works through the family, education, the
economy, the state, and other structures necessary for life in the
present age. God institutes governing authorities, for example, to
serve the good of society. [2]
The church respects the God-given integrity and tasks of governing
authorities and other worldly structures, while holding them
accountable to God.
The church must participate in social structures
critically. Not only God but also sin is at work in the world.
Social structures and processes combine life-giving and
life-destroying dynamics in complex mixtures and in varying degrees.
The church, therefore, must unite realism and vision, wisdom and
courage, in its social responsibility. It needs constantly to
discern when to support and when to confront society's cultural
patterns, values, and powers.
As a reconciling and healing presence, this church
is called to minister to human need with compassion and imagination.
It strives to pioneer new ways of addressing emerging social
problems and environmental degradation. This church has a
responsibility to mediate conflict and to advocate just and peaceful
resolutions to the world's divisions. It should support institutions
and policies that serve the common good and work with and learn from
others in caring for and changing global society.
As a prophetic presence, this church has the
obligation to name and denounce the idols before which people bow,
to identify the power of sin present in social structures, and to
advocate in hope with poor and powerless people. When religious or
secular structures, ideologies, or authorities claim to be absolute,
the church says, "We must obey God rather than any human
authority" (Acts 5:29). [3]
With Martin Luther, this church understands that "to
rebuke" those in authority "through God's word spoken
publicly, boldly and honestly'' is "not seditious" but
"a praiseworthy, noble, and...particularly great service to
God." [4]
Because the church is human as well as divine,
sinful as well as holy, it too lives under the law as well as the
gospel. Like all communities, the church has an institutional
dimension. This church must ensure that its own corporate life, its
relationships with other institutions, and its efforts to influence
society are governed by God's law, express its identity, and serve
its mission.
E. The Baptismal
Vocation of Christians
One of the ways the church participates in society is through
its members. In dying to sin and rising with Christ in baptism,
Christians are called to "walk in the newness of life"
(Rom 6:1-11). They fulfill their baptismal vocation in ordinary life
as family members, friends, citizens, workers, and participants in
voluntary associations. Since "Daily life [is] the primary
setting for the exercises of [the] Christian calling," [5]
it is in that setting that Christians are to serve God and neighbor.
This church sustains its baptized members through
the ministry of Word and Sacrament. The gifts of the Spirit form and
transform the people of God for discipleship in daily life. In the
body of Christ, the character, outlook, and moral convictions of
Christians are shaped in distinctive ways. Jesus frees Christians to
serve others and to walk with people who are hungry, forgotten,
oppressed, and despised. The example of Jesus invites Christians to
see people near and far away, people of all races, classes and
cultures, friends and strangers, allies and enemies as their
"neighbor."
Christians value the covenant communities of family
and marriage, and they view their work as a means by which they can
express their Baptismal calling. In these callings they experience
both joy and brokenness and discover the sustaining power of faith.
That power enables them to heal relationships, to challenge what
dehumanizes, to confront the structural obstacles to justice, and to
seek more humane arrangements in their places of responsibility.
Christians also can exercise their calling by being
wise and active citizens. For some, this may include service in
public office. Along with all citizens, Christians have the
responsibility to defend human rights and to work for freedom,
justice, peace, environmental well-being, and good order in public
life. They are to recognize the vital role of law in protecting life
and liberty and in upholding the common good. Christians need to be
concerned for the methods and the content of public deliberation.
They should be critical when groups of people are inadequately
represented in political processes and decisions that affect their
lives.
An important way that Christians carry out their
citizenship is through participation in voluntary associations and
movements, both religious and secular. At times, these groups may
serve a prophetic function as they protest particular evils,
question unexamined assumptions, challenge unjust or immoral
practices, and organize for structural changes in the work place,
local community, and wider world.
F. A Community of
Moral Deliberation
Christians fulfill their vocation diversely and are rich in the
variety of the gifts of the Spirit. Therefore, they often disagree
passionately on the kind of responses they make to social questions.
United with Christ and all believers in baptism, Christians welcome
and celebrate their diversity. Because they share common convictions
of faith, they are free, indeed obligated, to deliberate together on
the challenges they face in the world.
Deliberation in the church gives attention both to
God's Word and God's world, as well as to the relationship between
them. The church sees the world in light of God's Word, and it
grasps God's Word from its context in the world. The church must
rely upon God's revelation, God's gift of reason, and the guidance
of the Holy Spirit.
Scripture is the normative source in this church's
deliberation. Through the study of Scripture, Christians seek to
know what God requires in the church and the world. Because of the
diversity in Scripture, and because of the contemporary world's
distance from the biblical world, it is necessary to scrutinize the
texts carefully in their own setting and to interpret them
faithfully in the context of today. In their witness to God's Word,
the ecumenical creeds and the Lutheran confessions guide this
church's approach to Scripture, and the church's history and
traditions instruct it in its deliberation.
Transformed by faith, the church in its deliberation
draws upon the God-given abilities of human beings to will, to
reason, and to feel. This church is open to learn from the
experience, knowledge, and imagination of all people in order to
have the best possible information and understanding of today's
world. To act justly and effectively, this church needs to analyze
social and environmental issues critically and to probe the reasons
why the situation is as it is.
Deliberation in this church should include
people--either in person or through their writing or other
expressions--with different life-experiences, perspectives, and
interests. As far as possible, people such as the following should
deliberate together and with others:
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those who feel and suffer with the issue;
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those whose interests or security are at stake;
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pastors, bishops, theologians, ethicists, and
other teachers in this church;
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advocates;
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experts in the social and natural sciences, the
arts, and the humanities.
As a community of moral deliberation, the church
seeks to "discern what is the will of God--what is good and
acceptable and perfect" (Rom 12:2). Christians struggle
together on social questions in order to know better how to live
faithfully and responsibly in their callings. Processes of
deliberation need to inform and guide this church's corporate
witness in society. In dealing openly and creatively with
disagreement and controversy, this church hopes to contribute to the
search for the individual as well as for the common good in public
life.
II. Commitments
In light of these affirmations, the Evangelical
Lutheran Church in America makes the following commitments:
A. Sustaining Vocation
The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America commits itself to
sustain and support its members in their baptismal vocation to serve
God and the neighbor in daily life.
Through its congregations, synods, and churchwide
organizations, and affiliated institutions and ecumenical
relationships, this church therefore shall:
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foster in its members a faith that is active in
love, a love that seeks justice, and an insight that strives to
discern what is right, good, and fitting;
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support its members in their callings to love
their neighbor, to mend the creation, to advocate justice and
mercy in situations of brokenness, and to seek peace where there
is conflict;
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join with others to remove obstacles of
discrimination and indifference that prevent people from living
out their callings;
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promote sound, critical, and creative
citizenship and public service among its members;
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work to further democratic processes in our
country and throughout the world, and to redress the persisting
social and economic inequalities that prevent many from
participating effectively in these processes;
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encourage its citizen-members to join in the
public deliberations at all levels, particularly through
organizations that mediate between personal and public life, and
to engage in prophetic actions;
B. Witnessing as an
Institution
The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America commits itself to
serve God and neighbor in its life and work as an institution.
Through its congregations, synods, and churchwide
organizations, and affiliated institutions and ecumenical
relationships, this church shall:
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adopt institutional policies and practices that
model its beliefs and values and enhance its mission;
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support its educational and social ministry
organizations in their response to human need;
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encourage congregations and affiliated
institutions to engage in ministries that promote the well-being
of the human community and the environment and that empower
people to gain access to and influence in the systems that
govern their lives;
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develop social statements through participatory
processes of study and theological reflection that will guide
the life of the church as an institution and inform the
conscience of its members in the spirit of Christian liberty;
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speak out on timely, urgent issues on which the
voice of the church should be heard;
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expect its pastors, bishops, and lay church
leaders to pray for and to exhort those in positions of
authority on the basis of God's prophetic Word;
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work with and on behalf of the poor, the
powerless, and those who suffer, using its power and influence
with political and economic decision-making bodies to develop
and advocate policies that seek to advance justice, peace, and
the care of creation;
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mediate to achieve just and peaceful solutions
to social conflicts;
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participate in local, national, and
international ecumenical organizations and interfaith and
ecumenical partnerships in service of common goals.
C. Deliberating on
Social Questions
The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America commits itself to
foster moral deliberation on social questions.
Through its congregations, synods, and churchwide
organizations, and affiliated institutions and ecumenical
relationships, this church shall:
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be a community where open, passionate, and
respectful deliberation on challenging and controversial issues
of contemporary society is expected and encouraged;
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engage those of diverse perspectives, classes,
genders, ages, races, and cultures in the deliberation process
so that each of our limited horizons might be expanded and the
witness of the body of Christ in the world enhanced;
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draw upon the resources of faith and reason--on
Scripture, church history, knowledge and personal experience--to
learn and to discern how to respond to contemporary challenges
in light of God's Word;
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address through deliberative processes the
issues faced by the people of God in order to equip them in
their discipleship and citizenship in the world;
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arrive at positions to guide its corporate
witness through participatory processes of moral deliberation;
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seek to contribute toward the upbuilding of the
common good and the revitalizing of public life through open and
inclusive processes of deliberation.
III. God's Faithful Love
The church has the "treasure" of the
gospel "in earthen vessels to show that the transcendent power
belongs to God and not to us" (2Cor 4:7). We in the Evangelical
Lutheran Church in America set forth these affirmations and
commitments in society with the prayer that our words and deeds may
be earthen vessels that witness to the power of the cross. We care
for the earth and serve the neighbor in society with the joyful
confidence that God's faithfulness alone sustains the church and
renews our faith, hope, and love.
Our witness is a response to God's faithful love
received in Word and Sacraments. The bread and the wine, the body
and blood of Christ, are a sacrament of love. As love and support
are given you, you in turn must render love and support to Christ in
his needy ones. You must feel with sorrow all the dishonor done to
Christ in his holy Word, all the misery of Christendom, all the
unjust suffering of the innocent, with which the world is everywhere
filled to overflowing. You must fight, work, pray, and--if you
cannot do more--have heartfelt sympathy. [6]
Copyright © September 1993
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. Produced by the Department
for Studies, Division for Church in Society. Permission is granted
to reproduce this document as needed, providing each copy displays
the copyright as printed above.
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